Damiano Costa, CV May 2015

Transcription

Damiano Costa, CV May 2015
Damiano Costa
May 2015
Institute of Philosophy
University of Neuchâtel
1, Espace Louis-Agassiz
Neuchâtel 2000
Switzerland
EMAIL: [email protected]
WEBSITE: www.damianocosta.com
DATE OF BIRTH: April 24, 1986
NATIONALITY : Swiss
father of Alessandro (2012) and Noah (2014)
Area of Specialization
Metaphysics
Areas of Competence
Logic, Philosophy of Religion, Medieval Philosophy, Aristotle
EDUCATION
2014
PhD, University of Geneva
Thesis:
Being in Time: A Theory of Persistence and Temporal Location
Committee:
Kevin Mulligan (supervisor), Fabrice Correia (University of Neuchâtel),
Paolo Crivelli (University of Geneva), Cody Gilmore (University of
California, Davis), Thomas Sattig (University of Tübingen), Achille C.
Varzi (Columbia University)
2013 – 2014
Visiting Scholar, Columbia University in the City of New York
2010
MA, University of Geneva
2008
BA, Institute for Philosophical Studies, Lugano
CAREER SUMMARY
2015
Temporary Lecturer (chargé de cours), University of Geneva
2015
Temporary Lecturer, Institute for Philosophical Studies, Lugano (Switzerland)
2014 – 2015
Post-doc (collaborateur scientifique), University of Neuchâtel (Switzerland)
2014 – 2015
Temporary Lecturer (chargé de cours), University of Fribourg (Switzerland)
2013 – 2014
Visiting Scholar, Columbia University, Sponsor: Achille C. Varzi
2010 – 2013
Teaching fellow, Institute for Philosophical Studies, Lugano (Switzerland)
2010 – 2013
FNS Research and Teaching Assistant, University of Geneva
Shortlisted for:
Assistant Professor, University of Nottingham, July 2014.
PUBLICATIONS
(2015) “Multilocation: Fusions and Confusions” (with C. Calosi), Philosophia: Philosophical Quarterly of
Israel, 43, 25-33.
(2014) “Temporal Parts and Spatial Location”, in A. Reboul (ed.), Mind, Values and Metaphysics, Berlin:
Springer, (2014), 199-207.
(2013) “From Times to Worlds and Back Again: A Transcendentist Theory of Persistence” (with A. Giordani),
Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, 2:3 (2013), 210-220.
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(2012) “Attualità del Presente contro Atto d’Essere: Geach interprete di Tommaso d’Aquino?” Rivista di
Teologia e Filosofia di Lugano, 17 (2012), 331-342.
FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS
2013 – 2014
Visiting Scholarship, Columbia University
funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation
2013
Humbert Award
graduate essay prize
funded by the University of Geneva
2013
Philibert Collart Award
funded by the Genevan Academic Society
annually awarded to the top ranked Ph.D. project in Philosophy at the University of
Geneva
2010 – 2013
PhD Scholarship
funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation
funded through the research project “Essentialism and the Mind”
2008
Reginaldus Award for Distinguished BA Theses
funded by the Reginaldus Foundation, Lugano
TALKS (# = invited)
(C.30) Comments on Kris McDaniel’s « Modes of Instantiation », The Metaphysics of Properties and
Relations, Bergamo (7/2015)
(C. 29) # Being in Time, Catholic University of Milan, Italy (6/2015)
(C. 28) Endurantism and the Grounds of Existence, Truth and Grounds, Mount Truth, Switzerland (5/2015)
(C.27) # Special Relativity and Immortality, Phileas Lectures, Geneva (11/2014)
(C.26) Fine on existence and location, Objections to Fine, Varano Borghi (8/2013)
(C.25) Comments on G. Currie’s «Four media in search of fictional characters», CUSO Aesthetics
workshop, Ovronnaz (6/2013)
(C.24) Endurantism and Standard Theories of Location, Workshop on location and mereology, University of
Geneva (6/2013)
(C.23) Explaining Identity, Identity workshop, University of Zürich (6/2013)
(C.22) # Transcendentism about Persistence, Time and Existence, Catholic University of Milan (5/2013)
(C.21) Transcendentism about Persistence, University of Fribourg (4/2013)
(C.20) Transcendentism about Persistence, CUSO Doctoral Workshop with Josh Parsons, University of
Geneva (3/2013)
(C.19) # Do traditional theories of persistence rest on a category mistake?, The Ontology of the Mind and
the Semantics of Nominalizations, IHPST, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne (2/2013)
(C.18) Grounding Identity, Lemming Graduate Conference, University of Cologne (D) (11/2012)
(C.17) Comments on B. Caplan’s «Truth in Fiction over Time», PERSP Space & Time Workshop,
University of Barcelona (11/2012)
(C.16) # Location in Space and Time, Spatial Representation and Logic, Université de Lausanne (10/2012)
(C.15) # Grounding Identity, Paris-Hamburg Ontology Workshop, IHPST, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon
Sorbonne (9/2012)
(C.14) Property Exemplification and the Temporal Parts of Events, Joint Session of the Mind and
Aristotelian Society, University of Stirling (7/2012)
(C.13) Events as Kind Instatiations, SOPHA 2012, École Normale Supérieure, Paris (5/2012)
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(C.12) # What is a Criterion of Identity?, Catholic University of Milan (5/2012)
(C.11) # Events and Objects in Time, Time and Ontology, Université de Namur (5/2012)
(C.10) Derivative Location, Université de Fribourg (4/2012)
(C.9)
Essence and Persistence, Logic and Metaphysics of Essence, Lugano (1/2012)
(C.8)
Essence and Endurance, Candoc Colloquium, Ovronnaz (9/2011)
(C.7)
On and Against Enduring Events, ECAP7, san Raffaele University, Milano (7/2011)
(C.6)
On and Against Enduring Processes, 7th BCN/GVA meeting – University of Barcelona (5/2011)
(C.5)
What is a Temporal Part?, eidos meeting, Université de Genève (4/2011)
(C.4)
Property Exemplification and the Nature of Events, eidos meeting, Université de Genève (5/2010)
(C.3)
Comments on Simon Prosser’s “Temporal Passage and Awareness”, XVI eidos workshop,
Université de Genève (11/2009)
(C.2)
Substances, i.e. Structured Particulars, SOPHA 2009, Université de Genève (9/2009)
(C.1)
Substances & Modes of Persistence, eidos meeting, Université de Genève (5/2009)
PUBLIC OUTREACH
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Public lecture on personal identity, Lugano (Switzerland), April 2015
Public lecture on personal identity, Mendrisio (Switzerland), April 2015
Public lecture on temporal passage, Lugano (Switzerland), April 2013
Interview at the Swiss National Radio on the metaphysics of time, May 2012
Public lecture on eternalism, Mendrisio (Switzerland), April 2012
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
Graduate
3. Metaphysics (Geneva, French)
2. Normativity (Geneva, French, with Julien Deonna)
1. Problems in Metaphysics (Geneva, English, with others)
2015
2015
2013
Undergraduate
9. Logic (Lugano, Italian, with A. Giordani)
8. Seminar on Universals (Fribourg, French and German)
7. Logic (Lugano, Italian, with A. Giordani)
6. Philosophy of Mind (Lugano, Italian, with G. Ventimiglia)
5. Recitations for Introduction to Metaphysics (Geneva, French, with O. Massin)
4. Reading Seminar (Geneva, French, with others)
3. Logic (Lugano, Italian, with A. Giordani)
2. Reading Seminar (Geneva, French, with others)
1. Logic (Lugano, Italian, with A. Giordani)
2015
2014
2013
2012
2012
2012
2012
2011
2011
SERVICES TO THE PROFESSION
Conference Organization
2015
Truth and Grounds (with K. Mulligan)
A 5-days conference held on Mount Truth, Ascona, Switzerland
2015
The Metaphysics and Phenomenology of Thought (with M. Nida-Rumelin, J. Naito, F.
Correia, M. Scarpati)
A workshop held in Fribourg, Switzerland
2013
The Philosophy of Kit Fine (with P. Blum)
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A 6-days conference held in Villa Borghi, Varano, Italy
2013
Workshop on location and mereology (with M. Hämmerli)
A 1-day workshop held in Geneva, Switzerland
2013
Workshop with Josh Parsons (with M. Hämmerli)
A 1-day workshop held in Geneva, Switzerland
2012
Logic and Metaphysics of Essence (with A. Giordani)
A 2-days workshop held in Lugano, Switzerland
2012
Topics in the Metaphysics of Properties (with A. Giordani)
A 1-day workshop held in Lugano, Switzerland
2012
Nominalism: A Reassessment (with G. Guigon, G. Rodriguez Pereyra and M. Hämmerli)
A 3-days conference held in Geneva, Switzerland
Refereeing
Dialectica
Topoi
Journal of the American Philosophical Association
Synthese
Polish Journal of Philosophy
Humana.Mente
Aphex
LANGUAGES
Italian (native)
English, French (fluent)
German (good)
Latin and Ancient Greek (reading knowledge)
DISSERTATION ABSTRACT
Being in Time
A Theory of Persistence and Temporal Location
In Being in Time I articulate and defend a theory of diachronic identity based on a new account of the relation
between objects and time.
Traditionally, the relation between objects and time has been considered to be a direct one, analogous to the
one they have with space, and accordingly called location. In my dissertation, I argue that this locative
approach is metaphysically problematic insofar as it commits us to questionable consequences about the
nature of objects or about the metaphysics of location. In particular, the locative approach, depending on
how it is specified, requires that objects do not persist, have multiple exact locations, divide into temporal
parts, or are extended simples.
In place of this locative approach, and drawing from an analysis of our temporal semantics, I put forward an
account of the relation between objects and time – transcendentism, to give it a name – according to which
this relation is indirect, and has to be analysed in terms of the events in which objects participate.
Accordingly, for a object to exist at a time is for it to participate in an event which is located at that time. As
such, transcendentism is not yet a theory of persistence – insofar as objects may be in time without
persisting, i.e. by existing at an instant alone –. Transcendentism is an open option for every kind of
persistence theorist – be one an endurantist, a perdurantist, or an exdurantist –. However, the combination
of transcendentism and endurantism may reveal itself to be a semantically grounded and metaphysically
fruitful choice. Semantically grounded, insofar as the analysis of our temporal semantics speaks against the
locative approach and in favour of endurantism. Metaphysically fruitful, insofar as it allows us to frame a
theory of persistence that avoids all questionable consequences mentioned before – a theory according to
which objects persist without having temporal parts and without being extended simples or multilocated
entities.
The dissertation consists of four self-standing chapters in which (i) I systematize and highlight the
problematicity of the locative approach, (ii) I put forward and articulate the transcendentist alternative, (iii) I
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develop a suitable metaphysics of events, and (iv) I reply to five objections that have been moved against
the view both in official communications and in print.
REFERENCES
Kevin Mulligan
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
University of Geneva
2, Rue de Candolle
1211 Geneva, SWITZERLAND
Achille C. Varzi
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
Columbia University in the City of New York
1150 Amsterdam Avenue
10027 New York, U.S.A.
Fabrice Correia
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
University of Neuchâtel
1, Espace Louis-Agassiz
2000 Neuchâtel, SWITZERLAND
Cody Gilmore
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
University of California, Davis
2288 Social Science and Humanities Building
94015 Davis, U.S.A.
Thomas Sattig
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
University of Tübingen
1, Bursagasse
72074 Tübingen, GERMANY
Alessandro Giordani
(teaching reference)
[email protected]
Istitute for Philosophical Studies
via Buffi 13
6904 Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Olivier Massin
(teaching reference)
[email protected]
Department of Philosophy
University of Geneva
2, Rue de Candolle
1211 Geneva, SWITZERLAND